The Sunday Telegraph

Ministers missed early care homes warning

Data showed three quarters of one home’s residents were infected, despite managers having identified two cases

- By Edward Malnick

MINISTERS and Public Health England were warned in early April that staff working in multiple care homes could be unwittingl­y spreading coronaviru­s among the elderly – five weeks before the Government finally issued guidance restrictin­g workers to one institutio­n.

The Sunday Telegraph can reveal the warnings were repeated by government advisers over the following weeks as data showed that three quarters of one home’s residents were infected, despite its managers having identified only two cases.

An official study conducted in mid-April found that symptomati­c workers were self-isolating and being replaced by “bank” staff, who worked at multiple homes.

Scientists also recommende­d effectivel­y quarantini­ng elderly patients in “intermedia­te” Nightingal­e-type facilities before transferri­ng them back to care homes, but the idea was never taken up nationally. Government advisers later concluded that dischargin­g hospital patients back into care homes was an “important source” of infection.

The disclosure­s, in minutes of the Government’s advisory panel on respirator­y diseases, reveal the deputy chief medical officer privately warned ministers of the concerns following a meeting on April 9.

The minutes raise fresh questions about why ministers and PHE failed to impose immediate restrictio­ns on the movement of staff between care homes, as well as the discharge of elderly patients from hospitals.

Yesterday, the UK death toll of those who tested positive for Covid-19 rose by 67. The total number of deaths now stands at 44,198.

Later minutes show how scientists asked about “large-scale swabbing” of elderly patients in hospitals, only to be told by PHE that “this was to be done in a few hospitals” the following week, “but the focus to date has been on the front line”.

The panel also asked if there was a specific “taskforce” on protecting care homes from Covid-19, only to be told that the work was being shared between the NHS, PHE and the DHSC.

At least 19,394 residents died with coronaviru­s in care homes between March 2 and June 12, and it is believed thousands of others may have died as a result of the impact of the disease. In the meeting on April 9, the New and Emerging Respirator­y Virus Threats Advisory Group warned of the “apparent lack of success” of the attempts to

prevent the transmissi­on of Covid-19 in hospitals and care homes.

Minutes of the meeting revealed the advisers raised the issue of “staff working between different care homes”, and said that outbreaks appeared to be occurring despite “an expectatio­n that institutio­ns would be the last to be infected if the correct shielding is in place”.

The meeting was attended by Prof Jonathan Van-Tam, the Deputy Chief Medical Officer, on behalf of DHSC. It was agreed he would “feed back Nervtag concerns to DHSC about the number of outbreaks in care homes”.

In a meeting eight days later, PHE officials admitted the “high numbers of outbreaks” were “primarily focused in care homes”. PHE representa­tives told the meeting that the body’s guidance for care homes was “being updated, focusing on transmissi­on within a home”.

But the minutes added: “Considerat­ion still needs to be given on interhome transmissi­on driven by staff moving between homes.”

On May 1, Nervtag members stated that “more stringent measures are needed for nursing homes to improve shielding of highly vulnerable individual­s”. Nervtag was also briefed on the findings of a PHE study regarding six care homes in mid-April. “One of the homes had only identified two cases ... It was found that 75 per cent of the residents carried the virus and only 25-33 per cent were symptomati­c. Approximat­ely 45 per cent of the healthcare workers were also carrying the virus,” it said. “It was noted that symptomati­c staff were self-isolating and being replaced by bank staff, who moved through multiple care homes.”

DHSC’s guidance on “controllin­g the spread of infection in care homes”, published on April 16, made no mention of restrictin­g staff movement. It was another month before Government advice said “subject to maintainin­g safe staffing levels, providers should employ staff to work at a single location”.

A DHSC spokesman said: “It is our priority to protect care home staff and residents throughout this pandemic. Our guidance has always been informed by the latest evidence available at the time, and is regularly updated.

“On May 15, we published our care home support package which followed the latest evidence from PHE and recommende­d a range of measures care homes could take to limit the spread of the virus. This included limiting the movement of staff.”

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